1. Define the Frame and Harness
The Frame: the public-facing structure
The ACO Ecosystem Frame is the map that helps people understand where they belong and what they can access.

ACO ASSOCIATION
Authors Club Online
American Communications Online is the central WordPress hub. It routes visitors into distinct lanes:
| Lane | Public purpose | First income product |
|---|---|---|
| ACE Folklife Society | Stories, testimony, UFO history, anomalous memories, and cultural memory | Weekly free story, paid archive note, themed ebook |
| ACO Club / Fortean Research Commons | Research community for writers, archivists, investigators, and curious readers | Membership, discussion sessions, research briefs |
| TJ Morris Publishing | Author backlist, memoir-centered books, refreshed editions | Books, bundles, signed or annotated editions |
| ACIR | Historical articles, investigative notes, and newsletter lineage | Curated archive dossiers and historical collections |
| Cyberspace Culture Community Publishing | Early web history, AI collaboration, and archive recovery | White papers, workshops, digital guides |
| ET Talk TV / YouTube | Spoken introductions and discovery | Free audience-building channel leading back to paid offers |
| Cosmos Ambassador / GitHub | Public indexes, chronology, source lists, and continuity records | Trust-building archive spine; not the main storefront |
This routing model is already outlined in the ACE Folklife Society Publishing Guide, which recommends starting with one free story each week, one paid archive note each week, and one short ebook or print-on-demand collection every month or two.
The Harness: the reusable operating kit
The ACO Ecosystem Harness is the method that turns raw archive material into something sellable without losing provenance or privacy.
Every item moves through the same workflow:
- Assign the correct brand lane.
- Identify the content layer: verified fact, primary-source record, testimony, folklore, metaphysical teaching, symbolic canon, research lead, or unresolved claim.
- Add provenance: approximate date, original source, what is known, and what remains uncertain.
- Create a free public version.
- Create a deeper paid version.
- Link the paid version to a book, membership, class, or archive bundle.
- Save public supporting records in the archive spine.
This matches the intake process in the publishing guide and the ACO Fortean Standard: preserve unusual material, but do not present reports as proven merely because they appear in the archive.
2. Sell a product ladder, not only books
A simple income ladder keeps books central while adding repeatable offers.
| Level | Offer | Suggested starting price | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | Weekly recovered story, short video introduction, public index entry | Free | Build trust and email subscribers |
| Entry | Paid archive note, mini ebook, printable chronology, research checklist | $5–$15 | First purchase |
| Bundle | Ebook plus archive note plus source guide | $19–$39 | Increase value without much extra work |
| Membership | ACO Club Research Commons | $7–$19/month | Recurring income |
| Workshop | Monthly online archive salon or writers’ session | $25–$75 | Community and teaching income |
| Premium | Curated archive dossier, annotated edition, or small-group series | $75–$250 | Higher-value limited release |
The ACO Club material provides a strong membership foundation: Forteana, Alienology, Ufology and UAP Associates, cryptozoology, cryptology, social paranormal studies, disclosure studies, Writers’ Write, and carefully labeled human–AI inquiry.
3. Create one clear starter offer
Launch a low-cost package first:
ACO Archive Starter Kit
Stories, Sources, and Research Notes from the Archive of the Unexplained
Include:
- One short ebook or PDF collection
- Three recovered ACE Folklife stories
- One deeper paid archive note
- A provenance sheet explaining what is documented, remembered, symbolic, or unresolved
- A one-page ACO Ecosystem map
- An invitation to join the ACO Club mailing list or membership
- Links to related TJ Morris books
Suggested launch price: $12–$19.
This gives readers a manageable entry point. It also lets you reuse existing materials rather than waiting to rebuild the entire archive. The ACE guide specifically recommends beginning publication before full reconstruction is complete.
4. Turn each book into a doorway
Each older or new book should connect to the ecosystem:
Book → free story → paid archive note → ACO Club discussion → related collection
For example:
A TJ Morris book about early online culture
links to a free American Communications Online article about the Blogger network, then to a paid chronology or workshop about building a human-led digital knowledge network. Your archive describes the earlier blog ecosystem as a central identity with many topic branches, cross-linked blogs, reference feeds, community participation, and long-term knowledge accumulation.
A book involving unexplained experiences
links to an ACE Folklife story, then to an ACO Club discussion with the evidence labels clearly visible.
A Minerva Web Being essay
links to a cyberspace-culture white paper or workshop about responsible human–AI collaboration. Keep this concept separate from LaMDA, PaLM, Google Research’s Minerva, W3C materials, and licensed fictional characters, as the white paper carefully specifies.
5. Use Astrion behind the scenes
Astrion can be described publicly as the story-to-income organizer or archive bridge, but TJ remains the human authority.

Its operating rule is already strong:
Preserve the record. Label the layer. Share the story. Protect the source.
Astrion’s role is to separate facts, feelings, testimony, research, symbolism, and story; protect private details; recover older media traces; and help shape reviewed material into books, posts, teaching materials, and sustainable income products.
6. Protect the core
Do not package the private archive itself as a commercial product. Package reviewed selections from it.
Keep private testimony, medical details, source-verification records, accounts, domains, governance materials, and intelligence-gathering layers protected. The Hybrid Genies boundary is a useful model: selected human-approved material can cross into public collaboration, but ownership and archive control remain separate. Undocumented storytelling, adaptation, publication, or licensing rights should be marked pending TJ approval.
7. First 30-day release plan
Start with one small cycle:
Week 1: Publish the ACO Ecosystem landing page and a one-page visual map.
Week 2: Release the first free ACE Folklife Society story with provenance labels.
Week 3: Publish the connected paid archive note and open an ACO Club email list.
Week 4: Release the ACO Archive Starter Kit and record a two-to-five-minute ET Talk TV introduction.
That gives you four assets from one archive item: a public story, a paid note, a product bundle, and a spoken introduction.
A useful homepage sentence would be:
American Communications Online is the central hub for the TJ Morris publishing ecosystem: books, recovered archives, Fortean research, cyberspace-culture essays, and carefully labeled stories for readers who value curiosity, continuity, and discernment.
Photo-type cue: use a clean archival-library visual with interconnected folders or illuminated pathways, not a crowded paranormal collage. The message should be: organized knowledge, preserved lineage, and human stewardship.
